Eusynaptomyces enochri Scheloske

Santamaria, Sergi & Pedersen, Jan, 2021, Laboulbeniomycetes (Fungi, Ascomycota) of Denmark, European Journal of Taxonomy 781, pp. 1-425 : 30

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.781.1583

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5835057

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D3878A-B74C-FFF9-6717-7F32D8B0F9EA

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Eusynaptomyces enochri Scheloske
status

 

Eusynaptomyces enochri Scheloske View in CoL

MB#330757

Fig. 3A View Fig

Parasitologische Schriftenreihe 19: 110 ( Scheloske 1969). –

Type: “Auf den Vorderbeinklauen der Männchen und der Unterseite des Halsschildvorderrandes der Weibchen von Enochrus affinis , E. coarctatus . Eine Form. die etwas von der auf den Klauen lebenden abweicht, fand ich an den entsprechenden Körperstellen bei E. testaceus (Col. Hydrophilidae ). Die Wirte stammen aus einem Weiher bei Dechsendorf/Erlangen. Holotypus Abb. 20”. [ Germany]

Diagnostic features

[Reduced form] Receptacle consisting of up to five cells. Appendage basal cell (above cell VII) extending into one lateral outgrowth ( Fig. 3A View Fig , arrow). [Detailed descriptions: Majewski 1994b; Santamaria 2003]

Distribution and hosts

On Enochrus (Col. Hydrophilidae ) from Germany (type), Poland ( Majewski 1990b), Portugal (Santamaria 1999), and Belarus ( Majewski 2008).

Collections examined from Denmark

On Enochrus coarctatus (Gredler, 1863) (Col. Hydrophilidae )

DENMARK – Nordøstsjaelland (NEZ) • Heatherhill ; 56°5.240′ N, 12°8.611′ E; UC21; 22 May 2016; JP 94; JP det.; ZMUC C-F-122569 GoogleMaps .

Remarks

First record from Denmark. According to Majewski (1994b), thalli of this species are differentiated into two forms which are seemingly related with the host surface points undergoing contact through mating behaviour ( Scheloske 1969); the form B between the claws of tarsi of both anterior legs in male insects, and the form A or normal form under the right anterior margin of female pronotum. We have only found the claw form that is regarded to be more frequent ( Majewski 2008). Such reduced forms (see also Autoicomyces humilis ) pose true taxonomical problems. Moreover, the monotypic genus Phurmomyces has been questioned as a probably similar growth form of Ceratomyces ( Tavares 1985) .

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